Evidence-Based Practice

AANA Puts Evidence to Practice

The AANA recognizes the importance of evidence-based (EB) practice and its role within the larger environments of healthcare and society. The AANA realized the need to establish a systematic evidence-based process to analyze and resolve issues of import to the profession and clinical practice as the body of knowledge affecting nurse anesthesia continued to grow. Based on the work of Sackett et al. (2000), the AANA adopted the definition of evidence-based nurse anesthesia practice as "integration and synthesis of the best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values" in order to optimize the care of patients receiving anesthesia services.

Key Components of Evidence-based Practice

Patient preference/values

Clinical expertise

Best research evidence

Five Steps of the Evidence-based Process

As evidence-based practice is increasingly adopted, so are the available resources to assist with putting evidence to practice. Browse the AANA Professional Practice website for information and resources to assist CRNAs and others interested in learning more about evidence-based practice.

Evidence-Based Practice Resources

The Arizona State University Center for the Advancement of Evidence-Based Practice (CAEP) is an innovative enterprise that fosters evidence-based practice for the purpose of improving healthcare through a culture of best practice. The CAEP leadership team is comprised of interdisciplinary experts in EBP who facilitate the integration of internal evidence (i.e., quality & outcome data), external evidence (i.e., research) and practice across multiple settings to improve patient, provider, community, and system outcomes.

The Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine (CEBM) was established in Oxford as the first of several UK centers with the aim of promoting evidence-based health care. The CEBM provides free support and resources to doctors, clinicians, teachers and others interested in learning more about EBM.

Clinical Evidence comprises a database of high-quality, rigorously developed systematic overviews assessing the benefits and harms of treatments, and a suite of evidence-based medicine resources and training materials.

The Cochrane Collaboration is an international not-for-profit and independent organization, dedicated to making up-to-date, accurate information about the effects of healthcare readily available worldwide. It produces and disseminates systematic reviews of healthcare interventions and promotes the search for evidence in the form of clinical trials and other studies of interventions.

The DynaMed Evidence-Based Clinical Reference Tool is a clinical reference tool created by physicians for physicians and other health care professionals for use at the point-of-care. It provides summaries for more than 3,200 topics and is used by institutions, educators, clinicians in training, individual clinicians and group practices.

Evidence Based Nursing BMJ is a global medical publisher providing a range of evidence-based medicine products that improve the decisions doctors and patients make on a daily basis. The publication is peer reviewed and is offered on a quarterly basis.

Under the Evidence-based Practice Centers (EPC) Program of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 5-year contracts are awarded to institutions in the United States and Canada to serve as EPCs. The EPCs review all relevant scientific literature on clinical, behavioral, and organization and financing topics to produce evidence reports and technology assessments. These reports are used for informing and developing coverage decisions, quality measures, educational materials and tools, guidelines, and research agendas. The EPCs also conduct research on methodology of systematic reviews.

FIRSTConsult contains evidence-based summaries with a focus on primary care. Most recommendations have been assigned evidence grades.

The Joanna Briggs Institute is an International not-for-profit Research and Development Organization specializing in Evidence-Based resources for healthcare professionals in nursing, midwifery, medicine, and allied health. With over 54 centers and groups, servicing over 90 countries, the Joanna Briggs Institute is a recognized global leader in evidence-based healthcare.

Evidence-Based Practice Modules and Tutorials

The American Nurses Association has developed a Research Toolkit to help provide evidence-based care that promotes quality health outcomes for individuals, families, communities and health care systems. The Toolkit can also assist you in shaping health policy at the bedside, within an organization, and at the local, state and national level.

An online Evidence Based Practice Interprofessional Tutorial is accessible that offers guidance on the five-step evidence-based process and how to apply it using case scenarios. This tutorial is beneficial to medical professionals, faculty and students in healthcare fields as well as anyone else interested in learning about the EB process.

The University of Minnesota’s Bio-Medical Library offers a variety of evidence-based practice resources, tips and tutorials. Their goal is to provide services that enhance the skills required to conduct research, literature searches and other EB components.

Guidelines and Systematic Reviews

This section offers a good number of resources that provide a multitude of evidence-based guidelines and examples of systematic reviews. The following are nationally recognized and widely-used for researching current government and institutional guidelines and evidence-based research literature.

​The resources on this page may incorporate or summarize views, guidelines or recommendations of third parties. Such material is assembled and presented in good faith, but does not necessarily reflect the views of the AANA. Links to third-party websites are inserted for informational purposes and do not constitute endorsement of material at those sites, or any associated organization.